I am an Ultra-Conservative, Alpha-Male, True Authentic Leader, Type "C" Personality, who is very active in my community; whether it is donating time, clothes or money for Project Concern or going to Common Council meetings and voicing my opinions. As a blogger, I intend to provide a different viewpoint "The way I see it!" on various world, national and local issues with a few helpful tips & tidbits sprinkled in.

Structural and cyclical deficits are two components of deficit spending.These terms are especially applied to public sector spending which contributes to the budget balance of the overall economy of a country.Deficit spending, or simply deficit, is defined as over-spending: the amount by which spending exceeds revenue over a particular period of time.The total budget deficit, or headline deficit, is equal to the sum of the structural deficit and the cyclical deficit (or surplus/es).

Liberal friends and readers, as you read these questions think about the ones you did answer and the ones you didn’t.I have asked these questions to most of you and at least one of you haven’t or won’t answer them.Remember the non-answer answers don’t count and the yes or no questions are just that!

According to the Cato Institute, the U.S. federal government spent $92 Billion on corporate welfare during fiscal year 2006.Recipients included Boeing, Xerox, IBM, Motorola, Dow Chemical, and General Electric

When Obama made his comment that the Private Sector is doing fine, it is the state and local government [public sector] that isn’t, that was not a gaffe.In his heart that is how he feels and it was a Freudian slip.He is totally out of touch with American and Americans.

As Governor Scott Walker and Governor Chris Christie show you will not be loved or liked all that much to make the hard tough right choices.I just wish my former friend and others would see that.All they see is the little bit of personal money they are losing and missing the big picture that this is good for all of Wisconsin.It is sad that they are like that.